The "Improvers" of Mankind 5

The morality of breeding and the morality of taming are, in
the means they use, entirely worthy of each other: we may
proclaim it as the supreme principle that, to make morality,
one must have the unconditional will to its opposite. This
is the great, the uncanny problem which I have been pursuing
the longest: the psychology of the "improvers" of mankind.
A small, and at bottom modest, fact -- that of the so-called
pia fraus -- offered me the first approach to this problem:
the pia fraus, the heirloom of all philosophers and priests
who "improved" mankind. Neither Manu nor Plato nor Confucius
nor the Jewish and Christian teachers have ever doubted
their right to lie. They have not doubted that they had very
different rights too. Expressed in a formula, one might say:
all the means by which one has so far attempted to make
mankind moral were through and through immoral.